Bringing The World Home To You

© 2025 WUNC North Carolina Public Radio
120 Friday Center Dr
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919.445.9150 | 800.962.9862
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Already a Sustainer? Click here to increase now →

NC Board of Education members want to let public schools omit class rank from transcripts

classroom desks
Pixabay.com
/
Pixabay
Classroom desks

A new North Carolina policy exempts charter schools from including a student’s class ranking on their high school transcript. The state Board of Education wants lawmakers to give traditional public schools the same option.

Charter schools have always legally been exempt from including class rank from their transcripts, but the state’s transcript system has not had the capability to hide rankings.

The state’s new student information system fixes that, and so the state board passed a new policy last week, codifying the exemption for charter schools.

The state Board of Education also voted to send a letter to the General Assembly, asking them to consider allowing traditional public schools the same flexibility.

“There are superintendents around this state who very strongly feel like the class rank situation is causing conflict and disruption in their school," board Vice Chair Alan Duncan said.

The board’s student advisor, Ian House, agreed, arguing class ranks cause “division in the classroom.” He suggested school leaders explore alternative systems, such as releasing only a student’s quartile ranking.

Sign up for our Education Newsletter

Select Your Email Format

SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS

WFAE remains committed to our mission: to serve our community with fact-based, nonpartisan journalism. But our ability to do that depends on the strength of the financial response from the communities we serve. Please support our journalism by contributing today.


James Farrell is WFAE's education reporter. Farrell has served as a reporter for several print publications in Buffalo, N.Y., and weekend anchor at WBFO Buffalo Toronto Public Media. Most recently he has served as a breaking news reporter for Forbes.
More Stories